Sunday, August 30, 2015

LEST WE FORGET ROSE McCLENDON
(August 27, 1884 - June 12, 1936)

"The Negro race's first lady"

Born Rosalie Virginia Scott in Greenville, South Carolina, her parents moved her and her brother to New York City when she was six years old.

She married Dr. Henry Pruden McClendon in 1904. Although a licensed chiropractor, he worked primarily as a Pullman porter for the Pennsylvania Railroad.

She became totally committed to the theatre after 1916 when she won a scholarship to the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. She studied with Franklin Sargent and her first professional role in Justice by John Galsworthy followed at the Davenport Theatre in New York.  When she played Octavie in Lawrence Stallings's Deep River in Philadelphia, the noted director Arthur Hopkins urged
Ethel Barrymore to stay through the performance and "watch Rose McClendon come down those stairs. She can teach some of our most hoity-toity actresses distinction."  After viewing her performance Ms. Barrymore remarked, "She can teach all of them distinction."   After the show moved to New York, she received peer recognition and critical success.
                                                           
After her success with Deep River, she was featured in Paul Green's 1926 Pulitzer-prize-winning play, In Abraham's Bosom. Two years later, she played Serena in Dorothy and DuBose Heyward's Porgy.

Dubose Heyward believed that "Rose McClendon was perfect as the Catfish Row aristocrat Serena."
Soon she became known on Broadway as "the Negro race's first lady." Still, she remained modest and often stated that her recognition was quite undeserved.

In 1931 she played Big Sue in The House of Connelly, another play written by Paul Green.  The following year she portrayed Mammy in Never No More, a play about lynching produced by the Group Theatre.  During the 1933 season, she worked on radio in the "John Henry Sketches."  All this time she remained deeply committed to promoting the needs of her fellow black actors and actresses.  She fought with the actors' union for more opportunities for blacks and formed a small black theatre group.

When Hallie Flanagan began organizing the
Black Federal Theatre Project troupe in New York City in 1935, Rose McClendon played a significant part in the planning. The first meeting was held in her home.

In 1935 she starred as Cora in the Broadway production of Langston Hughes's Mulatto, the longest play on Broadway by a black author before Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun.
She received favorable reviews from the New York critics.

Unfortunately during the production of Mulatto, she became extremely ill with pleurisy and was forced to leave the cast.  A year later she died of pneumonia.

Her spirit has managed to live on. In the year after her death, a black theatre group named the
Rose McClendon Players was organized in her memory.


Rose McClendon sculpture by Richmond Barthe

Resource:  Notable Women in the American Theatre.  Harry Elam
Wikipedia


Friday, August 28, 2015

LEST WE FORGET BLANCHE BATES
(August 25, 1873 - December 25, 1941)

A kindergarten teacher who became David Belasco's
leading lady and starred in several of his productions.

She came from a theatrical family. Her father and mother performed in stock companies throughout North America, eventually settling in San Francisco.  The family traveled to Australia in 1874 when Blanche was a toddler and while they achieved great success as visiting stars, her father was murdered in Melbourne in mysterious circumstances. Her widowed mother retuned to San Francisco to continue acting.

Blanche was the first female to graduate from the Boys' High School in 1889.  After a short stint as a kindergarten teacher, she joined L. R. Stockwell's company and played a variety of roles. She became the leading lady of T. Daniel Frawley's Denver stock company in 1894. She remained with his company until 1898 when she traveled to New York to seek engagements.

Hired by Augustin Daly in the spring, she played second leads for several months.  She played the adventuress's role in
The Great Ruby (2/9/1899) only to resign after the first performance, citing an "uncongenial" atmosphere. It was rumored that there had been a dispute over gowns or that she was jealous of Ada Rehan, Daly's leading lady.

A spectacular performance as Hannah Jacobs in Israel Zangwill's The Children of the Ghetto (1899) led to a 5-year  contract with Liebler and Company at $20,000 annually.  She also attracted the attention of David Belasco who hired her to play the lead in Naughty Anthony, a forgettable farce. Belasco added a one-act curtain-raiser, Madame Butterfly, adapted from the story by
John Luther long.  With the role of Cho-Cho-San, the deserted Madame Butterfly, she achieved star status.

Though tall and large-boned, she played the delicate Cho-Cho-San with such believability that critics and audiences were convinced that she was, in fact, petite and fragile.

The next role for Belasco was as the swashbuckling Cigarette in an adaptation of Quida's Under Two Flags which ran for almost two years in New York and on tour.   Her next major role was the tragic Yo-San in The Darling of the Gods which Belasco had adapted from another story by John Luther Long.

In 1905 she stunned audiences as Minnie, "The Girl," in
The Girl of the Golden West with her athletic vigor and stamina.

She ended her association with Belasco after two more plays and married George Creel, a Denver journalist with whom she had two children.  She remained on the stage and retained star status until her retirement in 1926.  Her last stage appearance was in 1933 when she played a character role in The Lake starring Katharine Hepburn.


FROM THE SOUVENIR BOOKLET FOR
UNDER TWO FLAGS
PUBLISHED BY H. R. RUSSELL IN 1901


MS. BATES AS CIGARETTE          
       


(From the collection of Mari Lyn Henry)


She achieved her greatest success as Belasco's leading lady but was not able to duplicate her success after breaking with him.  Unlike other Belasco proteges, she had demonstrated solid professional achievement and capabilities before working with him.

Her background in western stock companies provided her with a wide-ranging versatility, enabled her to shift from the fragile heroines of Belasco's pseudo-Japanese plays to the battling Cigarette or hard-drinking Minnie with no apparent strain.

She was noted for her realistic portrayal of emotions in all of her major characters that when combined with the lush sentimentality of Belasco's scripts and productions, helped create lasting impressions on turn-of-the-century audiences.





RESOURCE:  Notable Women in the American Theatre. 1989. Alan Woods

Thursday, August 27, 2015



LEST WE FORGET DOROTHY PARKER
(August 22, 1893 - June 7, 1967)

When she died in 1967, she made one last strong political statement with her will: her entire estate was left to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. a man she had never met but whose cause she espoused.

As is revealed in the quote with this picture of her in 1921 at age 27, "In no way are our producers more wasteful of genius than in their disregard of negro actors."


Poet, short-story writer, critic, and playwright, she was born in New York City, and she recalled her urban childhood as unpleasant and stifling and her father and stepmother as oppressive.  She entered the world of the New York working girl ( a subject for later poems and stories) and went to work for Vogue, writing advertising copy and the following year joined the staff of Vanity Fair.  In 1919 she was promoted to drama critic but was dismissed the following year for writing damning reviews that angered the theatrical interests whose ads helped to support the magazine.


         For a few years after her dismissal from Vanity Fair, she contributed poems, stories, sketches and reviews to several magazines.  When Harold Ross founded the New Yorker in 1925, she became a member of the staff, writing drama reviews when Robert Benchley was on vacation.

It was during the 1920s that she became associated with a number of writers and other intellectuals, including
Robert Sherwood, James Thurber, Franklin P. Adams, 
Edna Ferber and George S. Kaufman. With these friends and others she founded the famous Round Table at the Algonquin Hotel. They met over lunch at a table reserved for them to exchange critical views and humorous anecdotes and quick-witted repartee. She was a prime mover in the organization and is generally recognized as having been their leader until she left the circle in 1930.


This was a period of exciting career moves for her. In 1926 she published her first collection of verse, Enough Rope, which became a best seller, and she had had a play produced on Broadway.

But her personal life was extremely troubled by a failing marriage. She twice attempted suicide. Lillian Hellman, her close friend, remarked  that she had felt herself to be unworthy, inadequate, a failure.

The decade of the 1930s saw her involved with Hollywood, writing screenplays which was not to her liking but lucrative. In 1933 she married fellow screenwriter and actor Alan Campbell. Their best known efforts include:
Big Broadcast of 1936, the first A Star Is Born,
Sweethearts, and Mr. Skeffington. They also wrote some dialogue and scenes for Hellman's screenplay of The Little Foxes. 

She was heavily involved in leftist politics and openly acknowledged that she was a Communist. She was an active worker with the Screen Actors' Guild's attempt to unionize the industry. In the late 1930s she went to Spain to work for the Loyalist cause during the Civil War and demonstrated her abilities as a serious journalist.  She, like other illustrious writers of the time, was blacklisted in Hollywood in the 1950s and was called to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee, which cited her for contempt.

Most of her best prose and poetry is distinguished by her sophisticated, caustic, tough though elegant approach.  She said what she had to say in the fewest posssible words.  Her themes involved the position of women in society she often viewed as phony and shallow, the alienation of human beings in the modern world, and the sorrow of love gone wrong (from her own experiences).


She wrote several plays, most of which were not successful. But her last contribution to American drama occurred in 1956 when, along with John La Touche and Richard Wilbur, she contributed lyrics for the momentous musical Candide, with book by Lillian Hellman and score by Leonard Bernstein.

She belongs to that group of writers---including figures as diverse as Samuel Johnson and Oscar Wilde---who are remembered more for what they said than for any piece of literature they ever produced. Her short story "Big Blonde," won the O. Henry Award.  Her memory lives on in the isolated verses like "Men seldom make passes/At girls who wear glasses." or "Brevity is the soul of lingerie."

Lillian Hellman devotes one chapter of her autobiographical An Unfinished Woman to Parker, close friend and collaborator. It contains a tribute that reveals much about the woman who hid behind the mask of barbed comments.  Dorothy Parker's "view of people" she writes, "was original and sharp, her elaborate ever-delicate manners made her a pleasure to live with. She liked books and was generous about writers, and the wit was so wonderful that neither age nor illness ever dried up the spring from which it came fresh each day."

RESOURCES:  Notable Women in the American Theatre. 1989.  W. Kenneth Holditch
Keats, John. You Might As Well Live: The Life and Times of Dorothy Parker. 1972
Kinney, Arthur F. Dorothy Parker. 1978
Gaines, James R. Wits End: Days and Nights of the Algonquin Round Table. 1977
Woollcott, Alexander. While Rome Burns (a chapter "Our Mrs. Parker") 1934.
Her papers are the property of the NAACP. Most of her letters and memorabilia are at the
Houghton Library, Harvard University.

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

LEST WE FORGET ZONA GALE
(August 26, 1874 - December 27, 1938)

The first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for Drama
in 1921 and a vigilant supporter of progressive causes.

She was an active member of the National Women's Party and she lobbied for the 1921 Wisconsin Equal Rights Law.  She attended the founding meeting (in New York) of the Lucy Stone League and became a member of its executive committee.

Her activism on behalf of women was her way to help solve "a problem she returned to repeatedly in her novels:  women's frustration at their lack of opportunities."

It is therefore fitting to pay tribute to Zona Gale on her birthday which in 2015 has been named Women's Equality Day to support the Equal Rights Amendment.

Born in Portage, Wisconsin, a small river town that remained her lifelong spiritual home, and was, under various fictitious names, the setting of many of her novels and plays. She was a descendant of a colonist who had settled in Watertown, MA in 1604 and her great-great-grandfather Henry Gale had fought in the Battle of Lexington in 1777.   Her father instilled in his sheltered, delicate child his homespun philosophy of human perfectibility and her well-read and overprotective mother was the dominant influence in her life.
      When she was eight, she decided to become a writer.  Her early sentimental stories, written during her Portage public school years (1891-1895) at the University of Wisconsin were never published. Upon graduation she moved to Milwaukee and became a reporter for the Evening Wisconsin and later for the Milwaukee Journal.  Among her more interesting assignments were her interviews of touring theatrical celebrities like Ellen Terry and Sir Henry Irving.

A graduate with an MA in literature from the University of Wisconsin in 1899, she was employed by the New York Evening World. But during the summer of 1902 she became Edward Clarence Stedman's
secretary.  The position gave her a chance to concentrate on free-lance and fiction writing and helped her to form important literary friendships.

Beginning in 1911 she lived in Portage and visited New York for two months each winter.  Her initial return to Wisconsin coincided with the beginning of her activism for social issues. She lectured often on behalf of women's suffrage, pacifism, better labor conditions, and Senator Robert M. La Follette's Progressive Party movement.

MISS LULU BETT

When her 1919 novel Miss Lulu Bett became a best seller, producer
Brock Pemberton encouraged her to dramatize it, which she did in ten days.   Pemberton responded to the adaptation by writing: "The play has the same direct, incisive quality the book had; it cuts to the quick, and lays bare the lines of the characters. In its simplicity, sincerity, and reality it strikes a new note in the theatre."


Critics and audiences welcomed the play with enthusiasm when it opened at the Belmont Theatre on December 27, 1920. However Zona decided a few weeks later to alter the play's ending from the ambiguous tableau of a newly liberated woman facing an uncertain future to a more conventional "happy ending."  She explained her revision in a statement to the
New York Tribune (1/21/1921) and the Miss Lulu Bett went on to a 600 performance run and won the Pulitzer Prize.

From the womenscivicleagueofportage.files.wordpress.com
"She was loyalty incarnate. With her, friendship was a holy thing like love or religion. But her ultimate loyalty was to truth, to justice, to sincerity..She was unmoved by considerations of place, power, or prestige. Her heart went out the the lowly, the underprivileged, and those to whom the community never gave the warmth of its attention."  Dr. Glen Frank, former president of UW Wisconsin-Madison and close friend.

Her contribution to American drama is best expressed in terms of her regionalism.  According to Robert Gard: "It is impossible to estimate the effect of Zona Gale's writings on the feeling of Wisconsin people for Wisconsin places.  Her accomplishments threw playwriting and theatre in general into a very favorable light on the stage and made subsequent drama development easier in Wisconsin."  (Grassroots Theater)

In broader terms, Ludwig Lewisohn wrote, "Now it is not too much to say that no other American dramatist has succeeded in so fully and richly transferring to the stage the exact moral atmosphere of a class, a section, and a period, as Miss Gale."
(The Nation, February 2, 1921)


Resources:  Notable Women in the American Theatre. 1989.
Felicia Hardison Londre

Derleth, August.  Still Small Voice. 1940, a thorough and affectionate biography of Ms. Gale.
Wikipedia

Monday, August 24, 2015


LEST WE FORGET MAE WEST
(August 17, 1893 - November 22, 1980)

The most famous "Sex Goddess" of the 20th Century made a successful debut as "Baby Mae" in a song and dance act at age seven. She demanded and got her own spotlight at the Royal Theatre, Brooklyn.

At age eight, she joined a theatre stock company to play child parts.  When she became too old to play children, she continued to perform in vaudeville and went on the road with a partner who she secretly married when she was seventeen.

In 1911 after performing at the Columbia Theatre on Broadway, she received offers from Ned Wayburn and Flo Ziegfeld.  She found she was most successful in a smaller theatre where she could work more closely with audiences.  In her autobiography,
Goodness Had Nothing to Do With It, she wrote "The entire effect of my personality depends on audiences being able to see my facial expressions, gestures, slow, lazy, comic mannerisms, to hear me properly."    After starring in Vera Violetta at the Winter Garden Theatre, she teamed up with two male dancers and returned to the vaudeville circuit with star billing and a top agent from the United Booking Office.  She was making $750 a week.  Although nudity was never part of her act, she was developing a sexually seductive wiggle in her routine and adorned herself with elaborate satin and velvet gowns, rhinestones, furs and feathers.   She parodied and glorified conventional sexuality.  "It wasn't what I did, but how I did it. It wasn't what I said, but how I said it and how I looked when I did it and said it. I had evolved into a symbol and didn't even know it."

During her years on the road with vaudeville acts (1912-1916) she became interested in jazz and visited black cafes in Chicago, where she observed blacks dancing the Shimmy.  When she was cast to play the lead, Mamie Dyne, opposite Ed Wynn, in Arthur Hammerstein and Rudolph Friml's Sometime, she introduced her version of the shimmy dance.  The dance amused and titillated audiences and critics, but she soon was in trouble with the Society for the Suppression of Vice in New York City.

She had long taken liberties with lines and lyrics in her performances. Unable to find a role she liked, she wrote her own.  She produced Sex which opened at Daly's Theatre in New York on April 26, 1926. Because of the title, newspapers refused to carry ads, but a poster campaign and word of mouth made the show a success. She played the lead who was a waterfront prostitute. In its forty-first week the play was closed by the aforementioned Society.  While Mayor James Walker was on holiday, his vice mayor decided to crack down on pornography.    In court, unable to establish that the text was obscene, the prosecutor secured a conviction on the basis that West, fully clothed in a tight metallic evening gown, moved her navel in an obscene way when she danced.  She was sentenced to serve 10 days in prison at Welfare Island for "corrupting the morals of youth."

Her second play, The Drag (1926) condemned current views of homosexuality and asked for tolerance and understanding.  Her next play, The Wicked Age (1927) was an expose of bathing beauty contests with their crooked operations and fixed winners. But her greatest success was Diamond Lil (1928) a comic melodrama with a gay nineties theme set in New York's Bowery.  As was her custom, she wrote the leading role for herself and it became the personification of Mae West as she was and wished to be and solidified the type of role she would play when she moved to Hollywood.  She realized that Diamond Lil, descending the stairs of a western dance hall, clad in extravagant turn-of-the-century costumes, lying in a golden bed reading the Police Gazette, spoofing the Salvation Army, love, and marriage and belting out the popular ballad, Frankie and Johnny, was her other self. It was a huge success. But her play Pleasure Man (1928) opened at the Biltmore and was closed by the police.  She went to court and won, but did not reopen the show.

All of her plays, never meant to be "classics" of the theatre, have aged well.  When she revived Diamond Lil 21 years later, critics compared it to American folklore like the minstrel show and burlesque.  In more ways than one, West had wiggled her way into popular culture.
     In 1948 Brooks Atkinson, reviewer for the New York Times, asked what all the 'patrol wagon ruckus' was about twenty years earlier because Mae's burlesque of sex (Diamond Lil) was "about as wicked as a sophomore beer night and smoker." (NY Times)

She decided to accept a $5,000 a-week contract from Paramount Pictures in 1932. Her twelve films included Night After Night in which she had ad-libbed an answer to an admiring remark, "Goodness, what beautiful diamonds," saying "Goodness had nothing to do with it, dearies."
          Then came She Done Him Wrong, I'm No Angel, Belle of the Nineties, Klondike Annie and 
Every Day's A Holiday. Her pictures rescued Paramount from financial problems, made a star of the unknown Cary Grant, and made West the highest paid star in Hollywood.  She teamed up with W. C. Fields to make a mock western, My Little Chickadee, writing the script and leaving room for Fields's improvisations.

Audience response to her was always strong.  Modern audiences know her primarily through her films. Like W. C. Fields and the Marx Brothers, she continues to be  in the iconoclastic tradition of Mack Sennett, Charlie Chaplin, and Buster Keaton, who ridiculed the sweet, the nice, the polite, and the accepted social customs.

"Come up and see me some time."



Resources:  Notable Women in the American Theatre. 1989.  Fran Hassencahl
Mae West. Goodness Had Nothing to Do With It.  1959. Revised in 1970

Sunday, August 23, 2015



LEST WE FORGET ETHEL BARRYMORE
(August 16, 1879 - June 17, 1959)

The queen of the American stage is best remembered for her forceful and compassionate portrayal of Miss Moffat in
The Corn is Green by Emlyn Williams.


Born into a theatrical family, the sister of John and Lionel Barrymore, she really had no choice about her destiny. She was literally born to be an actress.  However when she was in school, she developed a passionate desire to become a concert pianist, sometimes practicing as much as five hours a day. When she was fifteen, after her dear mother had died and her grandmother informed her she would have to earn her own living, she joined the tour of The Rivals starring Mrs. Drew, her grandmother, as Mrs. Malaprop  and Joseph Jefferson as Bob Acres.  "Acting was, after all the only thing I could do best."

After the tour her uncle, the charismatic John Drew, was able to secure her a small role in the Charles Frohman production of The Bauble Shop (1894).  Due to leading lady Elsie De Wolfe's decision to remain in New York when the play went on tour, Ethel who had been playing a "tea-tray carrier" and was her understudy was allowed to play Lady Kate.  She was not yet sixteen.  In Chicago she received her first mention:  "An opalescent dream named Ethel Barrymore. . .came on and played Lady Kate."

One night, while touring in J. M. Barrie's Rosemary with her Uncle John Drew, she received a telegram from playwright William Gillette asking her to appear in the small role of Miss Kittredge and to understudy the ingenue in his play
Secret Service.  She was delighted to appear on the London stage. Laurence Irving, Sir Henry Irving's son was infatuated with her and Sir Henry and
Ellen Terry asked her to remain in England to play a role in The Bells and Peter the Great written by Laurence Irving.

Returning to the United States,  playwright Clyde Fitch offered her the leading role of Madame Trentoni in his play Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines.
The New York opening on Feb. 4, 1901 made theatrical history. Not only was her charm as an actress applauded, but during the run of the play a fashion writer noted the development of "a real Barrymore cult among the girls, who model themselves on her." Young girls copied her clothes and hair styles.
       Further acting triumphs included Zoe Blundell in Mid-Channel (1910), The Shadow in which she played the role of a paralyzed woman confined to a wheelchair, Emma McChesney in the play
Our Mrs. McChesney by Edna Ferber and George V. Hobart.  Charles Frohman was never to see her in the play because he died when the Lusitania sank after being struck by a German torpedo on May 7, 1915.

She was looking forward to starting rehearsals for Zoe Akins' play Declassee when early in August, 1919 the New York shows were closed by the actors' strike.  She was drawn into the strike and became a leader of the Actors' Equity Group. As a result she was one of the people chosen to sign the five-year pact between actors and management that ended the strike.


Declassee opened on October 16, 1919 at the Empire Theatre. She played Lady Helen, a slightly tarnished lady, which turned out to be one of her greatest triumphs. With her two hundredth performance she broke the Empire Theatre's all-time box office record.

During the 1920s many actors were moving to California to work in film, but she gave no thought to deserting the stage.
In 1926 she made her greatest hit as Constance Middleton in Somerset Maugham's The Constant Wife. On December 17, 1928 the new theatre built by the Shuberts on W. 47th St. was named in honor of Ethel Barrymore.

Ethel's two brothers were both in Hollywood and in 1932 they convinced her to appear with them in a film. They had never appeared together in the same play and now they were co-starring in the film Rasputin and the Empress. Although she did not enjoy the experience, reviews were good and press agents began calling the Barrymores the "Royal Family of the American Stage."

The depression years of the thirties were hard times for her. Stage roles were not frequent and she was reduced to playing James M. Barrie's lead in the short play The Twelve Pound Look, which accompanied a feature film.  She was also in financial straits. In 1936 she began a 26-week series of radio programs of her own featuring her in revivals of plays in which she had appeared on Broadway. She was able to achieve financial stability.

It wasn't until 1940 after out of town tryouts she opened in New York as Miss Moffat in The Corn is Green.  'Magnificent" was the word most often used by the critics. John Mason Brown wrote that she "gives the finest, most thoughtful and concentrated performance she has given in many years. (New York Post, 11/27/1940). She played Miss Moffat for a total of 461 performances on Broadway before beginning a national tour.

She wrote in Memories, her autobiography:
Herman Shumlin had secured the American rights of The Corn is Green, and asked me to read it. When he came to the Colony Club to talk to me about it, I said, "You can't be Stanislavskyish about this. It's a simple play about a simple Englishwoman with the gift of teaching, who gets a wonderful chance."
   He looked a little startled that anybody should have an opinion about anything, but he controlled his apparent amazement and we came quickly to an agreement.
   The play and I were instant and terrific successes and believe me it was high time for that success. It came at a crucial moment in my life and made all the difference."

In 1944 she interrupted her tour of The Corn Is Green to play the role of Ma Mott in the film
None But the Lonely Heart with Cary Grant. She received the Academy Award for best performance by an actress.   She started to receive more film offers and could be seen in The Spiral Staircase,
Night Song with Merle Oberon and Alfred Hitchock's The Paradine Case. During the 1950s some of her best roles were in  Portrait of Jennie, Pinky, Kind Lady, and Young at Heart.

On her seventieth birthday, the Motion Picture Academy, in cooperation with the NBC radio network, presented a half hour tribute to her.  In 1950 she went to New York to participate in the American National Theatre and Academy (ANTA) Album, the theatre's annual benefit for itself. She agreed to do a scene from her old vaudeville standby, The Twelve Pound Look. It was to be her last appearance on the stage.

The Twelve Pound Look

One hundred admirers from Harry S. Truman to the leading stars of stage and screen sent messages and happy birthday wishes when she celebrated her 70th year. "They were broadcast in a half-hour, pre-recorded program over the ABC network scheduled at 10:30 o'clock in each time zone across the country." (New York Times, 8/16/ 1949).

Ms. Barrymore wrote: "To hear the dear, remembered voices of a hundred other friends, each bringing its own echo of that birthday message from all the corners of the earth.....
And Katharine Hepburn saying, as only her voice could say it:
...."I think what astounds us people of the screen and theater about her is the number and intensity of her interests. Would it be disloyal to my profession for me to hint that great stars are apt to show a little more interest in themselves than in anything else? Not Miss Barrymore. It's the world she's interested in--or rather a lot of different worlds--sports, history, music, politics, books. It seems impossible that a human being with the austere allowance of only twenty-four hours every day can keep in such close touch with them.
                  "She has more friends than anyone I know, but she's not a dear, gentle soul. Barrymores don't come like that. She has a trenchant wit, she can rebuke stupidity, or intolerance with silence better than Joe Louis could do it with his fists.  She makes appallingly accurate observations. She doesn't know the meaning of fear or the meaning of caution..."

And Spencer Tracy: "The year 1924. The play, A Royal Fandango. You, Miss Barrymore, were the star. I had one line. On the opening night I stood waiting for my entrance, shakily wondering whom they'd get to replace me the second night. Suddenly you stopped beside me and said quietly, "Relax. That's all you have to do--just relax." This is Spencer Tracy. I've been capitalizing on that advice ever since."

Resources:  Wikipedia.  Notable Women in the American Theatre. 1989.
Memories.  An Autobiography by Ethel Barrymore. First Edition 1955


Saturday, August 22, 2015


LEST WE FORGET  EDNA FERBER
(August 15, 1885 - April 16, 1968)

She described herself as a 'blighted Bernhardt'.

Edna Ferber's childhood was nomadic. Her family moved from Kalamazoo, Michigan, to Chicago, to Ottumwa, Iowa, back to Chicago, to Appleton, Wisconsin and again to Chicago.  Chicago later served as home base for Ferber, but Ottumwa and Appleton had the greatest impact on the young Edna. She never forgot the anti-Semitic treatment she underwent in the Iowa coal-mining town, though as an adult she saw her seven years there as "stringent, strengthening years" that gave her "a solid foundation of stamina, determination and a profound love of justice". Although she did not practice the Jewish religion, she was proud of her Jewish heritage and lashed out against anti-Semitism throughout her career.

From the age of seven to seventeen she read at least one book a day by such authors as Mark Twain, Charles Dickens, O. Henry, George Eliot, and Guy de Maupassant.  The theatre was an important part of her life, as she noted in her autobiography A Peculiar Treasure. "Certainly I have been stage-struck all my life.  The theatre served as a refuge during the family's Iowa years.  "I suppose it was the color, an escape in that dour, unlovely world."   Her love affair with the theatre continued at the high school in Appleton, WI, where she played leading roles in school plays.   She wanted to attend the Northwestern University School of Elocution in Evanston, Illinois. Her father's income could not support a college education. She  didn't want to be a writer; she loved the stage.

Foremost among her twelve novels were So Big (1924), Show Boat (1926), Cimarron (1930),
Saratoga Trunk (1941), Giant (1952), and Ice Palace (1958).  Eight of her novels were made into films.

Her career as a playwright began in 1914. Upon returning from her first trip to Europe, she agreed to  collaborate with George V. Hobart on a play based on Emma McChesney, a character she had created and published stories about her in magazines.  Entitled Our Mrs. McChesney, it opened at the
Lyceum Theatre in 1915. While she was pleased that the play was produced by the Charles Frohman
organization, she was unhappy with the choice of Ethel Barrymore for the title role. She was also disappointed with the script itself, describing it as "clumsy, inept and spiritless."

Playwright George S. Kaufman entered her life as a collaborator and a friend in 1924 when he asked her in a letter if she would like to collaborate with him on writing a play based on her short story, Old Man Minick. Although she was skeptical that the story was stageworthy, she jumped at the chance to work with Kaufman.  "If George had approached me with the idea of dramatizing McGuffey's First ReaderI'd have been enchanted to talk about it." It was the beginning of a work relationship which would produce six plays over the next 24 years.  Minick (1924), The Royal Family (1927), Dinner at Eight (1932), Stage Door (1936), The Land is Bright (1941), and Bravo! (1948).

Critics and biographers credit her with plot and character development in her collaborations with Kaufman and give Kaufman credit for dialogue and playwriting expertise.  George Oppenheimer, in reviewing the 1966 revival of Dinner at Eight, probably best evaluates the contribution of the Ferber and Kaufman team to the American theatre.
"George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber wrote an entertainment rather than an earth-shattering contribution to the art of drama, but it is intricately and wonderfully constructed, filled with bright dialogue and its characters are varied and as absorbing today as well as yesterday."

According to Julie Gilbert, Edna's grand niece, in the preface of her brilliant biography
FERBER  Edna Ferber and Her Circle:  Applause Books 1998.
       "I am fierce about my belief and defense of her prodigious gifts of observation, compassion, accuracy and storytelling.  As a novelist, she was unique--a thermometer of America, she took its pulse with every fiction. As a playwright, she held her own with one of theatre's savviest. She and George S. Kaufman were disciplined collaborators who knew that good work was meat and success was Creme Brulee.
          In her heyday---which lasted from 1924 when she won the Pulitzer Prize for the novel So Big until 1958 with the publication of Ice Palace---Ferber's bread always seemed so plentifully buttered. This was because she knew how to bake and how to churn. She was a hard and honest worker. She had no doubt that with 12 novels, 2 autobiographies, 8 plays, 4 collections of short stories, and a series about a traveling saleswoman which caused Theodore Roosevelt to call her the "dandiest writer in America," she had earned a place in perpetuity."